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tv   CBS This Morning Saturday  CBS  November 10, 2012 8:00am-10:00am EST

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good morning i'm rebecca jarvis. >> i'm anthony. here are a few of the stories that we'll be look at on cbs "this morning saturday." >> the war hero general who became america's top spy makes a confession and steps down. >> after the election the fiscal cliff the president and congress make their first moves to avoid a fall. americans love of lincoln. steven spielberg's new movie attempts to put a new face on an american legend. >> a long lost elvis concert is uncovered 40 years later.
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>> all that and so much more on cbs "this morning," saturday, november 10, 2012. captioning funded by cbs elvis may have left the building but peter frampton is in the house. we'll be here performing for us this morning as well. a lot of music ahead. welcome to the weekend. >> welcome to the weekend. we want to begin with the resignation of cia director david petraeus who admitted to having an extramarital affair. petraeus, one of the most decorated four star army generals was credited with turning around the u.s. war in iraq and lead agnew effort in afghanistan before becoming the head of the central intelligence agency. even president obama only learned of the scandal after returning to the white house
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from his re-election victory. cbs news homeland security correspondent bob orr is in our washington bureau and good morning to you, bob. >> reporter: good morning. david petraeus was one of america's most revered soldiers and as head of the cia in charge of some of the nation's most delicate operations. word of his resignation sent shockwaves through all of president only learned of the scandal after returning to the white house. david petraeus is not the first high ranking washington official to have an affair. but he is the first cia director to resign because of one. petraeus indiscretions came to the attention of the fbi. they were conducting an investigation into what looked like suspicious emails to a person at the cia and a person at the national intelligence agency. those emails involved paula broadwell the author of a petraeus biography called "all in." she spent time in afghanistan
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while petraeus was commander there, gathering material for her book. she told jon stewart on the "daily show" her research included working out with the fay spousely fit four tar general. >> when i was in kabul we would do a lot of interviews on run. for him it was a good distraction from the war. of course he's a bit concerned as someone in his position would be about legacy. >> reporter: president obama acknowledged the military side of the petraeus legacy saying in a statement by any measure he was one of the outstanding general officers of his generation. as head of the cia petraeus violated no law by having an affair. although he conceded a moral failing, saying he showed extremely poor judgment both as a husband and a leader of the agency. it's important to note petraeus affair was never the target of federal investigators. in fact the fbi was concerned about petraeus' computer perhaps it was compromised, giving outsiders access to secret information. sources say there is no evidence that any operations in the end
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were jeopardized and no one has been charged with a crime. anthony. >> bob orr in washington thanks. for more on the stunning developments and what it could mean for the turn to a columnist from "the washington post." david, good morning. david, first of all, as bob orr said there's kind of a bipartisan shock at this resignation. this is someone who was respected on both sides of the aisle. to begin with how did he get that reputation? >> well he earned it through the very difficult campaign in iraq. you'll remember that when he was named commander in iraq in 2007 even the u.s. military had essentially given up on the war and president bush decided to push on, name him the commander, he had an ambitious strategy that he said was a counter insurgency based strategy to turn the war around. democrats were upset we weren't pulling out of iraq. you remember the ads that appeared in newspapers sponsored
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by liberal groups calling him general betrayus. during the next two years he would come back to congress, you remember that image of that general with all those medals selling the country that the war in iraq was turning around we could move u.s. troops in a more honorable way. it was a great achievement. i watched that close up on visits to baghdad to see him and i think the force of personal leadership is what was decisive there. he commanded all the troops across the middle east. from that very plum position he n general mcchrystal retired, resigned under pressure in kabul as our commander of u.s. forces petraeus was asked if he would take that job. that probably was the most difficult job in his military career in the sense he was trying to build a counter insurgency with such limited afghan means. then came the cia job.
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it was one unfamiliar with a soldier used to saluting. it wasn't always an easy assignment. >> it wasn't. it was a difficult transition from the military to the cia. why do you think that was? >> i think it was difficult in large part because of the nature of the place. petraeus, like many military officers is a control guy. he is used to people saluting and doing what he told them to do when he gives an order and he was in a very different kind of bureaucracy. it took him some no, sir learn the culture of the cia, to learn to operate there with an easier hand than he's had as a commander, people certainly were suspicious of him when he came in. frankly many cia directors over the decades and that's a workforce that's suspicious of everybody, not easy to manage. i think things had gotten better by the time that this terrible news came. >> david, just quickly, i mean i think a lot of people were
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surprised the fbi was investigating the head of the cia. how extraordinary is that? >> it's very unusual and we don't know all the details about the fbi investigation, what it encompassed and precisely what role it played in his departure. there are precedents in the case of john deutsch who was cia director in the clinton administration briefly. he was fired for taking a cia computer home and using it to access internet sites that he shouldn't have in a way that might have compromised the classified information on that computer. he lost his job and curt clearance. >> we have to ask about benghazi because he was supposed to be testifying later this week about benghazi. to what degree might this tarnish, there will be someone in his place but to what degree might this tarnish any kind of testimony coming from the cia on the matter? >> i don't know that it would tarnish the testimony. petraeus, because he's so visible, he's one of the most
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famous faces in america, would have been a lightning rod for critics of the agencies performance. he'll be replaced by the acting director who a career agency bureaucrat. he knows the material as well as petraeus does. i think the story they will tell is one of some misjudgments and i think congressional critics rightly will jump on them for those misjudgments about relying on local libyan militias and also of great heroes among the cia contractors who tried to protect the diplomats. a painful hearing for people at the cia but i wouldn't think it would generate as many headlines with petraeus gone. >> david ignatius thank you. >> as we just mentioned david petraeus's resignation came less than a week before he was supposed to testify before the senate intelligence committee about the deadly september 11th attack on the u.s. consulate in benghazi libya.
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on friday the timeline was released outlining the events of that day and cbs news correspondent margaret brennan has more on this story. good morning to you. what did we learn from this pentagon report? >> reporter: good moinrng to you. the attack was over. and the bodies of the four dead americans had already been airlifted out of libya 40 minutes before the first u.s. special operations forces were in position. the assault began around 4:00 p.m. washington time. and defense secretary panetta was informed shortly after it started. he gave a verbal order to send in military personnel sometime between 6:00 and 8:00 p.m. but they did not arrive in libya until 3:00 p.m. the next day. >> margaret what military assets were mobilized? >> reporter: there were about three units mobilized and deployed a special operations force from central up. two anti-terrorism security teams were sent from spain.
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and a delta force unit was sent from fort bragg, north carolina. here's the controversial part. while the president ordered that all available pentagon assets respond defense secretary panetta said that gun ships were fixed wing fighters quote were not in the vicinity of libya, nor postured to be an effective operational option during the time frame of the take. now the pentagon has come under fire from senator john mccain and other republican senators who say military assets should have been on alert given it was september 11th they should have been within striking distance. >> it almost sounds like this opens up as many questions as it answers. >> reporter: that seems to be the way the story has developed, rebecca, throughout. we do have three closed door hearings on capitol hill this week. they will be represented from the pentagon cia and state department and investigators are going ask were there military openings considered and decided against it. could it have made a difference. the state department hasn't
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disclosed whether ambassador stevens requested enhanced security and the cia did they provide the appropriate security response. last week the agency acknowledged they sent in six agents to fight off dozens of attackers and as you said petraeus was scheduled to testify on thursday because he resigned acting direct or morell will answer these tough questions. >> thanks margaret. now to the economic crisis that could erupt less than two months from now. the so-called fiscal cliff, the federal government faces unless congressional republicans and the president can overcome their differences on taxes and spending before the end the year. cbs news senior white house correspondent bill plante reports. >> reporter: president obama said friday he's willing to work with congressional republicans to solve the looming financial crisis. >> i'm open to compromise. i'm open to new ideas. i'm committed to solving ourfiscal challenges. >> reporter: but he's not willing to extend the so-called bush tax cuts for high income
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americans. >> i'm not going to ask students and seniors and families to pay down the entire deficit while people like me making over $250,000 are not asked to pay a dime more in tax. >> reporter: 1.2 billion budget cuts kick in and unemployment can rise about 9% and the economy will go into recession. house speaker john boehner said he's willing to deal too but want the funds to come from closing tax loopholes not raising tax rates. >> everyone wants to get our economy moving again. everyone wants to get more americans back to work again. raising tax rates will slow down our ability to create the jobs that everyone says they want. >> reporter: the president says he's not whetted to every detail of the plan but two days after his election he says americans agree with his approach.
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now he has to convince republicans he has that mandate. so just how much of a threat is the fiscal cliff and what are the chances of an agreement to avoid a potentially dire consequence? steve rattner is a leader of the nonpartisan group campaign to fix the debt. he oversaw the auto industry bailout for the obama administration. steven, welcome. the stakes here are quite high for the average american family 90% of the country is going see a tax hike. you might see them if you're in an average income household go up $2 $3,000. what are the chances in your view that a deal actually gets done on this? >> you separate it into two parts. the probability of a deal to avoid the calf to avoid the tax increases is very high because everybody recognizes that this would be a terrible thing for american families for our economy, for just running a government in a sensible way. the second part of it however is a major deficit deal to deal
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with our trillion dollar deficit and put the country on a long term sustainable fiscal path. there it's more complicated. >> we went through a bruising debt ceiling battle last year that toledo the downgrading of u.s. credit. i've heard people say that the environment after this election is different. do you actually believe it is? >> i think the environment after this election is a little bit different. we had an election. the president won. mr. romney lost. the house is still republican. everybody knows where they stand. the last year and a half or so has been heavily political. we have a brief window in the american politics to get something right. there's a feeling on all sides it's not good for the futures of any of these political leaders to not have a deal. there's one other important piece to remember here. unlike some other occasion not necessarily the one you mentioned, congress has to do something or we go over this cliff. so the usual congress modus operandi of doing nothing
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doesn't work. they have to do something. the hope is doing something they will do something big, something bold and something constructive. >> the whole reason we're facing this cliff is congress tried to put something in place that would force action that would force decision stocks made. it's interesting you bring up the point there's a difference between tax cuts and deficit cutting. what do businesses want to see and what would help hiring in this country, help the stock market in this country? >> this is an important point. business has been very badly, i think, affected by all the uncertainty in washington. you can't run a business if you don't know what your tax reits will be what the fiscal policy will be and so business wants first and foremost certainty. the conthing the second thing business wants is an outlook. they know how to do add and do math. they see trillion dollar deficits. we can't run our business this way. >> that's uncertainty.
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>> and bad policy. the people who are part of our group and it is nonpartisan, we have 100 ceos, they are willing to take higher tax. again they can do arithmetic. they know to get this budget to balance you have to have higher taxes. they just want to plan. they want something that they can take to their board and say here's a sensible plan. >> it's worth noting even small businesses and i was a guy who ran ten restaurants in new york city told me yesterday this is enormously worried about what the conditions of business are going forward. do you think there's any chance this could not happen? >> this being a -- >> a deal. >> on the fiscal cliff? >> yes. there's some chance we go over the cliff at least for a little while. there's a cool of thought we could get more action if congress does fall off the cliff, so to speak. >> do you agree? >> i don't. i think the consequences for the markets, of going over the live -- the market is already turbulent. we had a tough week.
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people woke up from the election and said oh, my god it's the fiscal cliff. it's a roller coaster. we will be careening around the tracks if we go around the cliff or go over. >> thank you. >> thousands of people are still struggling without homes or power in the battered northeast. now almost two full weeks after the enormous storm sandy and life isn't easy for many that escaped the worse of sandy's wrath. gasoline is hard to come by. mark strassman is at a gas station here in manhattan with the latest. good morning, mark. >> reporter: good morning. there's a line of cars that goes back four blocks at this midtown monument gas station, waiting for the chance to fill up on day two of gas rationing throughout new york city on long island and at a dozen new jersey counties. drivers buy gas on days that cars have the odd or even last
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nunl on number on their license plate. saturday is even sunday is odd. the goal of the city's 800 gas stations avoid long lines and short tempers. good luck. >> people are mad. when i tell them there's a line they are mad. when they get up here they are mad. somebody waits two hours they don't want to get out of line because their license job is wrong. >> reporter: two weeks after the storm frustrations mounting all over. in ocean side, new york thousands of people without power are angry and demanding action from washington. >> where is the help for elderly and children. >> we can't get help because there's no phone. >> reporter: in seaside, new jersey a barrier island devastated by sandy governor chris christie had this message for residents unhappy they have yet to see their battered homes 12 days after the hurricane. >> when i get this island safe i'll let people on. until that time they are not coming on.
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>> reporter: 300 residents were bussed out the seaside yesterday. they were given two hours to survey damage and stuff whatever they could in two suitcase then leave. >> i had to tell my kids their home is destroyed. >> my daughters are alive and my friends and neighbors are alive. >> reporter: because of the gars rationing there's a cop at every station. he's checking to make sure the right people are buying gas on the right day. he's comparing the registration numbers and license plates to make sure they match up. people who are not gassing up today many in new york maybe doing some volunteering mayor michael bloomberg declared this a day of volunteer for new york city. volunteers will be bussed to hard hit areas in the city to pitch in. anthony, rebecca. >> thanks mark. there's one piece of good news last night the statue of liberty was illuminated for the first
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time since hurricane sandy. it was closed due to storm damage only better island. no word when the statue will reopen for visitors. >> there's new violence in syria as civil war. two suicide car bombs exploded at a military camp in the southern city of dorao. the fighting has forced thousands of syrians to flee to safety in turkey. the new leader of the key rebel group is calling on the international community to support opponents of the government of bashir al assad without conditions. >> today is malala yousufzai day in pakistani. it honors her who was shot and seriously wounded a month ago by the taliban for speak out in favor of education for pakistani girls. pakistan's government will give a cash stipend to more than 3icans.
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the deadline had between middle of this month. president obama signed the affordable care act in 2010 and it calls for households and businesses to buy a private health plan through insurance exchanges. after the president's re-election house speaker yukon boehner an opponent of the measure described it as a lousy plan. >> after weeks of negotiations contracts between american airlines and 7,000 unionized pilots may fly. the sides reached a tentative agreement on a new deal calling for new pay, benefits and work rules and would clear the way for americans parent company to emerge from bankruptcy. american had reached agreements with all of its unions except the. i lots. >> it's about 21 minutes after the hour. here's lonnie quinn with our first check of the weather. >> good morning. let's start off as i like to do by looking at the whole country. the big picture shows you sort
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of interesting. a bit of a curve there. anywhere north of that curve there's bad weather. anywhere south nice weather. what you have actually in terms of dynamics this is the cold front. this is the warm front. i want to talk about how that warm front is going to affect the northeast. we heard some folks still without power after sandy. things are improving out there. take a look at some facts. it's been 12 days since sandy hit. every single one of those days you had temperatures below average. you had a snowstorm mixed in there, such a bizarre occurrence of weather events but things are warming up. today you're back to average, tomorrow 60s some could be seeing the 70s by monday. we'll watch all that guys. that's a quick look at the national picture. here's a closer look at your weather for the weekend.
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and very happy saturday everybody. over to you guys. thanks lonnie. coming up credit card companies are trying to induce holiday shoppers to use that plastic. we'll tell you which ones could mean a real cost savings. >> later daniel day-lewis stars as our 16th president in the new movie "lincoln." how well does he capture honest antibiotic? -- abe. you're watching cbs "this morning."
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one. oddest congressional races in campaign 2012 it ended with a winner on tuesday night who never campaigned. illinois representative jesse jackson jr., he never so much as shook a constituent's hand or even gave a speech but he won in a near landslide with 64% of the vote. >> more on what might be ahead for jackson next. he could be in the midst of a plea deal. we'll find out about the mysterious case of jesse jackson jr. this is cbs "this morning saturday."
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if you didn't watch all the election coverage on tuesday night this gives you and idea of how it went and it's very cool. >> it is a kind of a time laps political art piece that was posted online showing how red and blue america was assembled as cbs and other news organizations made the calls. you all know how it ended. >> yes, indeed. welcome to cbs "this morning saturday" i'm anthony mason. >> i'm rebecca jarvis. >> no one was surprised that president obama won his home state in illinois but another race in the second congressional district was most unusual. u.s. representative jesse jackson jr. easily won re-election even though he never campaigned at all. >> jesse jackson jr. has been on a medical leave of sorts since june. first he went missing.
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then eventually revealed that he was being treated for bipolar disorder. his constituents have not seen him since. >> he's a diligent hard worker and now has a sickness and hopefully they will be as caring for him. >> as election day northeastward jackson finally spoke to the people by robo call. >> hello, this is congressman jackson. for the past few months i've undergone treatment for a immediate condition. >> they claim his exile is into a federal investigation into his misuse of campaign funds and involvement in the rod blagojevich scandal. jackson referenced trouble in his recorded message. >> like many human beings a series of events came together in my life at the same time and they have been difficult to sort through. i am human. >> on tuesday none of mattered. jackson cruised to victory as he
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conva less in the mayo clinic retaining his seat with over 63% of the vote. >> i'm anxious to return to work on your behalf. but at this time it's against medical advice and while i will always give my all to my constituent, i ask you to continue with your patience as i work to get my health back. >> his constituents for now seem to be more than patient. >> so a most unusual situation to say the least. let's take a closer look at what it could mean with lynn sweet. lynn, good morning. first of all i think a lot of politicians would envy his campaign one robo call and he gets 64% of the vote. what do we know about his condition currently? >> we know he's back in mayo clinic. he went back a few weeks ago. he's been suffering from and getting treatment for bipolar depression and his bipolar disorder. it's said some of this disorder is his gastric surgery he had a few years ago.
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this is his second trip to the mayo clinic. and we know that he had been in a treatment facility in tucson before that. but the diagnosis is there. he came back to washington in september and he was getting outpatient treatment but then there was public sighting people were staking out the house. this whole story is very sad as well as odd. >> there's the two federal investigations. what's the latest on those? >> actually the latest is that my colleague at the sun times broke the story that he's in a plea deal agreement with federal authorities in washington over the alleged misuse of campaign funds. now, we don't know if there's a deal yet but we know that if it is usually these kind of deals usually would involve some kind of perhaps resignation, can he still get a pension or health insurance or whatever but often
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that's what a plea deal does include. >> now i think your paper reported that his attorneys actually pushed the government to hold off on any kind of deal until the re-election, correct? >> yeah. we did. that was the story that was also broke by my colleague because it's just one thing after another. for years now with congressman jackson. i don't expect everyone to remember the whole story but he's had a shadow over him since the election of barack obama in 2008 where what started his trouble when he started maneuvering to get appointed to that senate seat. he got dragged into that whole scandal involving that former now imprisoned governor rod bag bag. >> if he's at the mayo clinic in minnesota on swearing in day what happens? >> can tell you that. i checked into that. you just don't get sworn in. that seat is vacant until you show up in washington get sworn in by the speaker of the lonnie quinn
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with another check of the weather. >> good morning. let's take a look at the satellite radar picture for the whole united states of america. all this nice clear area this is all complements of a high pressure system smack dab in the tennessee valley. big portion is affecting positively because of it. this is the story right here in the northern plains and northern rockies, low pressure system. clash of warm and cold air, also that air rises up over the mountains, squeeze the moisture out that's a lot of notice. not just a little snowstorm. big old snowstorm. look at this. from minot to billings to logan and casper you'll be seeing one to two feet of snow. your winds will be sustained between 20 25 miles per hour. if they get up to 35 miles per hour for about a three hour span, you're going to have near blizzard conditions out there and you won't be able to see a thing. please be careful. just let it snow in that area
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because whether you want toilet snow or not it's going to snow. that's a quick look at one portion of the country. here's a closer look at the weather for your weekend. all right. hope you have a great day. rebecca, i hope you have a great day. >> thank you. coming up next attention holiday shoppers your time is now. there are credit card discounts, deals and incentives that could safe you as much as $500 this holiday and we'll tell you all about them. you're watching cbs "this morning saturday."
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with halloween and the election in the rear view mirror credit card companies are peering down on the road ahead hoping to see huge numbers of holiday shoppers. the national retail federation
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estimates the average consumer will spend about $750 on gifts this year. so which credit cards are offering the best shopping deals and incentives. joining us is a financial columnist for good house keeping emergency and president and co-founder of wealth management. great to have you with us. what do you recommend? there's a lot of credit cards. but before people go out and look at those what should they think about? >> the caveat if you're going for awards cards, if you carry a balance and pay interest obviously it negates the reward don't do that. you got to use these wisely. you got pay off the bill. you got to make sure you're not charging just to get rewards and getting into a hole. >> you picked four cards that have good deals. the chase sapphire preferred. >> for the big spenders out there. if you spend $3,000 in the first three months you get 40,000 bonus points. that translate to either $500 in
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travel or $400 credit on your statement. that's a dood amount of money. you can shop on amazon.com which you can buy anything over there and redeem those points any time and they are unlimited. no blackout dates. >> citi's forward card. >> this is for folks with a more normal budget. if you spend $650 within three months you get a $100 gift card or 10,000 points. you can spend that online. at restaurant books, movies and a dollar for every point after that. >> have one of these american express card. i don't even know what is the deal they are offering. >> you got to know. i use those points all the time. travel to buy gifts at the holidays. 20% off. when you shop through the rewards site you get another 20% off of a particular vendor wine enthusiast. michael core. small business saturday i'm a big fan of this. if you go register at shop
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small.com they will give you a $25 credit if you spend $25. so that's basically a free gift for this holidays. >> that's next saturday. >> yep. >> we're following the small business saturday. >> finally there's the discover card. >> here's a good one. a lot of folks are fans. they don't want to track rewards and seems cumbersome. they want the money. this is the cash back offer. 5% cash back on purchases up to $1500. 75 bucks. free one day shipping at amazon as the holidays come that's important. and you can also redeem the points for gift cards at vendors and get more. let's say you have $20 in points get a $25 banana republic card. that's money for you to save for this holidays. >> money for you to save for the holidays. >> i do it every year. >> you do. we appreciate it. >> up next the new movie about our 16th president.
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>> now, now, now. >> how well does daniel day-lewis capture the essence of abraham lincoln? you're watching cbs "this morning saturday." chili's $20 dinner for two. share an appetizer then choose two entrees, like our new santa cruz steak served with fire-roasted corn salsa and jalapeño cheddar mashed potatoes. chili's $20 dinner for two. more life happens here.
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it's the slogan of the state of illinois but might well be applied over tory state of the union, the land of lincoln. abraham lincoln is acclaimed as the nation's great presidents and steven spielberg new film "lincoln" celebrates it. >> things which are equal to the same thing are equal to each other. that's a rule and it's true because it works. has done and always will. >> joining us now are two authorities on lincoln. the author of "rise to
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greatness." also withous is presidential historian. the author of "the raising of the president." david let me start with you. you've seen this film. >> yes. >> is this the real lincoln as you know him? >> thought it was impossible to get this man on film but they've done it. they captured the kharisma and mystery which makes him so as if nighting even 150 years later. >> doug what do you think of daniel day-lewis' portrayal? >> i think he was great and sally field stole the show. some critics say david was telling me she was over the top but mary todd lincoln was over the top. she if anything was a little subdued. i thought she was brilliant. the nuance. the richness of the portrayal of each of these characters including robert todd lincoln was very impressive. >> in your book you describe lincoln as a man of many contradictions.
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what do you mean? >> everyone saw something different in lincoln. some people said he was the most willful man in the world, others said he lacked the will. some people would come and say he's the funniest guy other people said he was the saddest man who ever lived. i think that's closer to accurate. so, he would be -- he would reflect to people sort of what they were looking for almost. >> if he was sad, why was he so sad? >> he lost his mother when he was 9 years old, was abandoned in the wilderness by his father. his closest friend in the world was his sister two years older, she died when he was a teenager. his whole life was a story of loss. >> david you raised an interesting point he reflected to people what they were looking for. that's one of the reasons why we remember him so fondly that's one of the reasons why he was successful at the time. today as a president of this
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country, you can't necessarily choose your messaging because it's all over youtube, it's all over twitter, facebook social media. do you think he would have been as successful today behaving as he did back then? >> i don't think he would be successful today because he didn't have the voice, he didn't have the looks. but if he could -- if he could write the script he could make a president. and he was brilliant politician and i'm glad that spielberg shows that. spielberg must have been carrying these ideas around his whole life because you can see it come out so creatively. it's not a perfect movie. there's some illogical moments. you can find pulitzer prize winning books about lincoln. he's hard to capture. no i don't think lincoln would be elected today. >> a lot of critics loathed him. >> they were fighting a war basically over his views and hundreds of thousands of people killed. what lincocoln understood ththough wawas that politics is a game of
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additionon, and that americans arere forward lookiking people and so he was constantly trying to bring people to him, taking a moderatate positition and alwlways sketching out wherere he was l leading the country, w why they were fightining the the united states had if it could just get through this crisis. >> one awkward moment at the beginning, lincoln meets casually these soldiers and quoting back to him the gettysburg address. actually no one would have memorized the gettysburg address that early. lincoln hadn't memorized the gettysburg address. >> how did he get elected because he's very misunderstood. he's this odd character that comes to office. >> i'm anxious to read david's book on that. >> great political organizer behind-the-scenes. he would let -- let his events
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sweep him along helplessly but he was always looking ahead and trying to figure out well if events are going this way how do i jump ahead and get to where i can ride those events. very strategic. he was very logical. he always explained things in terms of mathematics. i liked that clip because he was very much about arithmetic and adding things up and jotting down numbers. he was a calculator. >> at what point -- you talk about his looks. i was struck he's 6'4". at the time he must have seemed like seven feet. a very awkward looking man. at what point do you think he became appreciated? >> immediately after his assassination. we often think what would have happened if he had lived. and one of the things that would have happened is we wouldn't think of him as quite so successful. he had this amazing story where he solved an incredible problem, the war, slavery, and then immediately left the scene on good friday, you know and became
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the american martyr the american saint and so that completeness of that story in a way is one of the things that speaks to us. >> david and doug thank you both for being here this morning. we appreciate it. >> up next no noise, no crowds no problem. living in a bubble. sounds good. that and other stories behind the headlines. you're watching cbs "this morning saturday." when it comes to getting my family to eat breakfast i need all the help i can get. that's why i like nutella. mom, what's the capital of west virginia? charleston. nutella is a delicious hazelnut spread my whole family loves. mom, have you seen my -- backpack? nutella goes great on whole-wheat toast or whole-grain waffles. and its great taste comes from a unique combination of simple ingredients like hazelnuts, skim milk and a hint of cocoa. yeah, bye. have you seen my -- yes. and...thank you. [ male
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it's a $3,000 transparent bubble that can be put anywhere and comes with a power pack good for 40 hours of lighting. >> like that. next up the ultimate splash down the guinness book of world records say this is the tallest water slide in the world. it's in brazil and it's 14 stories high and it's called insano. >> who you go on insano. >> not a chance. >> finally subway makes a math fail. they offered a six inch sand for 0.9. i would have cashed in. >> later they all said they are willing to come together and solve the nation's problems but we've heard that before. any real hope for bipartisanship in washington? we'll talk to someone who should know. the rest of you stick around
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♪ welcome to cbs "this morning saturday" i'm anthony mason. >> i'm rebecca j coming up putting promises to the test. america's leaders love to talk about compromise but is there any real hope of an era of bipartisanship? we'll talk to someone who has had some success making big deals in washington and around the world. >> then elvis like you've never seen him. in fact like almost no one has seen him a long lot of movie has quite a rock and roll tale to tell. >> is this what guys want? a woman just like mom? housingle men choose who to date. but first our top story this half hour president obama is praising retired general david petraeus for his lifetime of military service but mr. obama
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may be shaken by petraeus' sudden resignation. after just 15 months heading the central intelligence agency, and by the reason he quit he admits cheating on his wife. cbs news senior correspondent and former fbi official john miller is here with more on petraeus, the fbi investigation and the potential fallout. john, good morning. >> good morning. >> this is something that the fbi was looking at his emails but didn't expect to find. >> they weren't even looking at his emails. they were looking at something else and they kind of stumbled into what appeared to be communications between the director of the cia and paula broadwell. there were things about those communications that were suspicious. now there's a little here we don't know. what would those things have been? were they leaving draft messages without sending them in a common e-mail account so that they could go read them and fly under the radar, were they using language that was so cryptic as
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to raise those questions, were they using other people's e-mail accounts. whatever it was it rose to the level that people in the fbi said we're going to have to determine what this is about. >> so it's not the fbi making a habit of monitoring the director of the cia. >> no. not at all. it is not that. this is one of those things where everybody looked at it scratched their head and said i don't know what this is but whatever we have to figure out what it means. they did a lot of investigation to run all the regular traps and at some point when nothing had panned out and to be clear they said we'll have to interview director petraeus and ask him flat out what is this about. >> we've seen other politicians survive affairs. why in this case is he stepping down? >> you know that's an interesting question because in the post-bill clinton, washington milieu an extramarital affair is not a
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career kill shot today. i think there's a kbafgs factors here. number one petraeus is a very disciplined man who believes in going by the rules. number two, this is something i learned in the culture of the intelligence community when i worked there which is if you are having an extramarital relationship, if you are involved with a foreign national, if there's something else going on in your life with the security people at the cia will say is we may not tell your husband, we may not tell your wife but you have to tell us. we need to know that if something is going on. and i think there was a part on the director's math saying this will come out somehow, some way, not a time under my control in a have thousands of employees who i hold to one standard what comes out they will say why isn't the standard the boss was held to. >> does that end that investigation? >> oh, yeah. that's a very important question because the question is what did he do wrong? no major security violations
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except the failure the report this relationship. no criminal violations whatsoever. no classified material. no breach of cia equipment. so none of that was there. this is an overblown personnel issue. >> john miller thank you. there's another infidelity industrial complex, the president of lockheed martin corporation was fired over a relationship with a subordinate. he said in a statement that his conduct did not meet the standards that he's always held himself to. he had been scheduled to become the ceo in january. >> president obama will gate firsthand look at the storm damage here in new york. mr. obama is expected to travel to new york on thursday and meet with people trying to recover from the devastation. he got an up close look at the damage and recovery efforts along the battered new jersey shore when he visited there two days after the storm. the jetblue pilot who had an inflight meltdown last march is
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a free man. he was freed from a mental health facility after seven months of evaluation. he was charged with interference of a flight you about but found not guilty by reason of insanity. he's prohibited of boarding a plane without permission from a judge or a probation officer. >> time for another check of the weather with lonnie quinn. >> let's get to the map. here is the big picture. the most compelling story out there weather wise is right here up around the northern plains the northern rockies, we have a snowstorm with a lot of snow out there. take a look at the numbers. one to two feet of snow where from minot down throw began and casper. near blizzard conditions because your winds will be gusting 25 35 miles per hour. 35 mile-per-hour winds for three hours to catch that blizzard. it's a possibility but you'll have stronger winds just south of that area. topeka oklahoma city santa fe lubbock. here is where you'll have wind
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gusting up to 65 miles per hour. not blowing snow around it's blowing dust around. temperatures securely in the 70s. brownsville, texas could see 80 degrees today. that's a quick look at the national picture. here's a closer look at the weather four weekend. all right. that will do it for me. anthony over to you. >> is there any hope for ending the political gridlock in washington? most americans say they want their leaders to work together and in the wake of the election most of those leader are at least saying they agree. >> you want us focus on your jobs not ours. and in that spirit i've invited leaders of both parties to the white house next week so we can start to build consensus around
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the challenges that we can only solve together. >> american people want us to work together. we republicans want network together. democrats want to network. >> let's rise above the dysfunction and do the right thing together for our country. >> so has the time for bipartisan compromise finally arrived? senator mitchell is co-founder of the bipartisan policy center and joins us from chicago. great to have you with us. >> thanks for having me. >> there's a big difference between talk and action and i wonder to what degree do you think this conciliatory tone we're now hearing out of washington days after the election is actually going
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amount something bipartisan in action? >> i think it will amount to something in some areas but obviously not in all. it's easy to make the general statements about wanting to get together much tougher when you get into the details because the public while they do want cooperation, they generally tend to want it on their terms and the terms are different. this is about an evenly divided country on many issues. but do i think that these leaders have the ability to reconcile the tensions that exist in our society on some issues and make some progress and i hope that does occur. >> senator there's been a lot of discussion recently about how the culture in the senate seems to have changed. in your era, you know, democrats and republicans were often friends, went out the dinner at night or had drinks together. do you believe the atmosphere has changed in washington and has made it much more difficult to essentially come together? >> yes, i do. it's always been tough.
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there never was a golden era when it was sweetness and light. when i was there i thought it was pretty rugged but much more difficult today. on the day i was elected senate majority leader i called bob dole and i said here's how i intend to behave you. i won't surprise you or embarrass you. i won't criticize you personally in public or private. and he was delighted. we shook hands and not once in the six years that i was the senate majority leader and he was the minority leader did a harsh word ever pass between us although we debated very vigorously and disagreed almost every day on issues. so it can to be done but it's tougher now. the vast infusion of money has had a corrupting influence in our country. it has, i think, severed the bond of trust between the public and politician most people don't think that their elected
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officials are really representing them but a more responsive to their contributors and it's put the people in office and the candidates on a mad chase for money that really is never ending. i think that's a corrupting factor. >> how do you forge that compromise in a situation like that where some of the elected officials say either i was paid for by a particular group of people or i was voted for by a particular group of people who put me in office to do something very specific and ideologically very different from the alternative. >> well, i don't think the problem is -- although it does exist it's not widespread of actual corruption where someone is actually paid to do a vote. i think it's the perception by the public that exists that the political leaders are responsive to contributors and, of course there's access that's more readily available to a big contribute yoror than an average
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constituent. i think the political leaders can do it. i think that they recognize that their highest obligation is to the country. while they are members of a party and they have other obligations, obviously their own convictions there's room in there to find outcomes that while not 100% for anyone represent a step forward for the country. i think that's the challenge. there's developed in this country in recent years and rhetoric that compromises a bad thing, that it represents the absence of conviction or strength and that you're only really tough if you stand up and say no toni change whatsoever. that's not possible in a country of 310 million people as large and diverse as ours and as evenly divided. so there has to be a recognition national interest comes first. i think they can do it. >> we hope you're right. thanks so much for being with us this morning. coming up next the king.
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♪ >> a long lost film of elvis in new york more than 40 years ago. our exclusive sneak peek is next so stay with us on cbs "this morning saturday." [ elizabeth ] i like to drink orange juice or have lemon in my water... eat tomato sauce on my spaghetti. the acidic levels in some foods can cause acid erosion. the enamel starts to wear down. and you can't grow your enamel back. i was quite surprised as only few as four exposures a day what that can do to you. it's quite a lesson learned.
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my dentist recommended that i use pronamel. because it helps to strengthen the enamel. he recommended that i use it every time i brush. you feel like there is something that you're doing to help safeguard against the acid erosion. and i believe it's doing a good job.
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so where you living now, will? will: [ inner voice ] the only place i can afford. i'm so glad you're home. yeah. will: [ inner voice ] if i was smart enough to pounce on the daily double for just a buck 99 on the mcdonald's extra value menu i can handle this. i got this great loft space. ooo, very cool. only six degrees separate the body temperature of chocolate
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lovers from the melting point of chocolate. so when you take hershey's chocolate and add bubbles, it deliciously melts the moment you take a bite. hershey's air delight. it just might make you melt. ♪ the year was 1972 the
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beatles had come and gone but an ex-g.i. known as the king of rock and roll was still there. this is the first time that footage has been seen on national tv. elvis's only time on stage in new york other than tv appearances in the 1950s. those shows at the garden weren't televised. what you just saw was taken by a fan with a super 8 movie camera. that amateur movie is out on dvd entitled "elvis prince from another planet." and with us the king's close friend jerry schilling. we'll take a look at that for just a moment and then discuss. >> thanks. ♪ >> that's just great stuff. >> great stuff. you know, i produced a lot of
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documentaries on elvis and when you talk about, what would be called bootleg footage it doesn't have that kind of quality. >> this is a super 8 film shot by somebody in the second row. >> correct. a guy by the name of don lintz. here we are 40 years later it shows up. it's amazing. >> did he have a tripod. >> pretty awesome. >> he had a super 8 millimeter camera. somebody told me just recently he snuck in a tripod and he knew the security people so they stood kind of around him. >> was he sitting on this for 40 years. >> yeah. he was talking to somebody from the record company and they were talking about something else and he mentioned that he had footage from madison square garden the only time elvis ever played. so, of course they checked it out and went wow. this is something special. >> we have more of that something special.
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let's take a look. ♪ >> you and elvis go way back. >> to 1954. >> was he nervous that night that we just saw? >> he was always nervous before going on stage. but particularly this night. because when he came to new york in the '50s, the press was pretty brutal. ed sullivan said i'll never have him on my show. i have a family show. and, you know being a southerner and coming to new york and he's 21 years old and he's getting that kind of
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reaction then to come back and play the garden and have the press and the fans loving him and go wild like we are this morning, it really meant a throat him. >> there was one time he played the garden. you traveled with him for years. what was it like traveling with him? >> well you know, we kind of set the pace for what rock stars do today. even though elvis had the press conference in his package we were tame compared to current day standard. but, you know we were called the mafia. we did things late at night, very nocturnal. we got into that lifestyle. he was a great guy to sit up all night and talk with and, you know, we would finish concerts like this and go back to the hotel and get with the background singers, go up to the suite. he loved being elvis presley.
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god you must have got entired. he loved it. >> some amazing times. >> he was an amazing guy. >> thanks. >> thank you. up next how do men pick women to date? >> mom, this is lydia. lydia, this is my mother. >> oh, please to meet you. likewise. i'm in real estate. >> how interesting. so am i. >> you think lydia is like mom? >> no. we think lydia is mom. >> charlie is not alone. in dating women like his mother we'll tell you why. you're watching cbs "this morning saturday."
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now let's talk about single guys and what sounds like a shocking question. should they date their mothers? now of course we don't mean that literally. notice how they can the guys to read the story. new research suggests men are likely to date and form relationships with women who significantly resemble their own moms. is this really normal behavior? let's learn more from author of "why him, why her, 000 find and
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keep lasting love." first of all what does this study show us? >> it comes out of finland and they took 70 men and women who are married and look at photographs of their spouse and parents and found men were significantly more likely to marry a woman who looks like their mother than women were to marry a man who looks like their father. >> the oedipal complex is real. >> nobody has been able to prove that. it's not something that really works. but that was freud's idea. he thought women fell in love with their mother there was a headline homosexual craving but that's never been proved. men are more visual so it's natural for men to apply visual to things they are looking for in a wife.
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if we look carefully women find all kinds of things in their father not attractive. not visual things. women want a man who is you had humorous, can keep a job. if father was like that yes. >> a sheep and a goat study, shed some light on this. >> good friend of mine. a entrepreneurneuroscientist. they had baby goats raised by the sheep. the baby goats when grew up became much more attracted to female sheep rather than female goats. so, there is something biological certainly about looking at somebody finding those characteristics if you liked your mother you might go for those traits. >> there's a nurturing quality. >> yeah.
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>> you said that the most important question is this one. when should a potential wife be worried that there man's mother fixation is going too far. >> that's important. there's a red line. we evolve to raise our children and it's important to make that relationship first and whatever jeopardizes that relationship should be tossed out. >> thank you so much for being with us this hurricane warning. >> still ahead remember this guy? ♪ >> yes, peter frampton monday terrify hit maker of the '70s here with us this morning and he's brought one of his closest friends. you're watching cbs "this morning saturday." can't wait. >> fantastic. ♪
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oh, my these are the twi hard camping out in chilly damp los angeles ahead of monday premier of "breaking dawn." >> those fans hope to see their favorite stars walk the red carpet on monday night. >> remember you were saying i wish i could be in l.a. for this. >> don't think that's an accurate quote. >> welcome back to cbs "this morning saturday." i'm rebecca jarvis. >> i'm anthony mason. we have lots more coming up including a performance by one of rock's greatest stars peter frampton. >> that's why you are here. you wanted to be here. >> i'm hired to be here. but to lonnie for a final check
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of the weather. >> here's what we see on the big satellite picture. big string of clouds. big looping curve. this is the cold front. that's a warm front. let's talk about where the cold and warm air exists. clearly where i showed you the cold front. that's where you find the coldest air. no thermal heating. 11 in cut bank. 16 in billings. you maybe in the single digits. abilene, brownsville the warmth in the 80s for you but i still think the best weather of all down in florida. portions of the southeast. jackson, wilmington macon, plenty of sunshine high temperatures in the 70s. nice light winds that's a beautiful spot to be. get out and enjoy. here's a closer look at the weather for your weekend.
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all right. we were just talking about how beautiful it will be in florida. let's talk about florida, jacksonville to be precise 74 beautiful sunshine today. perfect spot for my shout out because jacksonville florida today is the annual jacksonville fair continuing through tomorrow. there are rides, entertainment, be exhibits and if you're still perhaps in election mode drop by the exhibition hall and cast your ballot in the very hard fought race between chloe the cow and pinky the pig. the pig has been doing a lot of mud slinging. we want to thank everybody for watching cbs "this morning saturday." anthony, rebecca, over to you guys.
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this is a good life right here. >> not so bad. >> when your father is known as godfather of american cuisine choosing to become a chef is taking on quite a challenge but chef marc forgione has set his own standards for success with a restaurant, marc forgione right here in new york and the american cut steakhouse in atlantic city, new jersey. plus he won the coveted title of iron chef america in 2010 and chef marc forgione joins us this morning with his ultimate dish get this tomahawk reeye withibeye and chili lobster and texas the east. >> it's surf and turf on steroids. >> looks like a salad in my drink. >> anthony goes straight for the
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drink. >> tell us what we got here. >> when i opened american cut in atlantic city, you know we were creating a steakhouse and a lot of steakhouses do a surf and turf. but the way we do things we like to take things that you had before and kind of make them ridiculous, i guess is the best way to describe it. what we did is take a 45 ounce 28-day dry aged steak and 2 1/2 bound lobster and combined them on one plate with a fiery spicy sauce. >> it tastes delicious. you're a new york chefs. lot of new york chefs have faced a lot of trouble as a result of hurricane sandy. your restaurant everything was okay? >> i got the double duty. i have a restaurant in tribeca and atlantic city. both are standing and everyone is alive. i'm going right to atlantic city to open for the first time. and marc forgione in tribeca
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opened on monday. >> you are growing a mustache now. anyone who knows you, you didn't have this before sandy. tell us about it. >> i'm doing, you know, we're doing november to raise awareness and money for men's cancer research. what we'll do as a restaurant group whatever we can raise with this ridiculous mustache we'll match it for sandy relief. >> what a great roger. now, you had, obviously, a chef in the family. was that inspiring or intimidating. >> when i grew up i grew up like everybody else. i didn't know my father was the godfather of cuisine. i just thought he was dad. >> did he make you call him that? >> i didn't grow up eating like this. trust me. >> what do you like to snet. >> like to eat everything. normal food. people think chef need to have dinners all the time but when we're done cooking for 14 hours a day, you know, something like a good slice of pizza is you
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know, stuff that at least i like. i can't speak for all chefs. >> you studied a lot of things in school before you came back to this. >> went to college to try not be a chef. i think when you get rebellious you don't want to do what dad does. i found myself for fun having $5 dinners at my college house instead of going to psych class and foresty class, i was cooking for fun. a light went off well if this is fun and psych class isn't let's do this. and you're good at it. >> who your favorite people to cook for? >> my favorite people to cook for? i would say say people that enjoy restaurant. people that understand at my represent rants is we like to have fun. you can see with the stuff that's here. you take your life and food too seriously, you know, probably not the place four. >> we love having you. thank you so much. have you sign our dish. best wishes with the opening in
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atlantic city. great restaurant here in new york. marc forgione, thank you. for more on for and the dish head to our website. >> up next i'm very happy to raise my glass and here it is to my friend peter frampton who will be with us. ♪ >> from a huge 30th anniversary tour to our very own second cup cafe he'll perform live in studio 57. you're watching cbs "this morning saturday." it's called passion. and it's not letting up anytime soon. at unitedhealthcare insurance company, we understand that commitment. so does aarp serving americans 50 and over for generations. so it's no surprise millions have chosen an aarp dicare supplement insurance plan insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement plans, it helps cover some of what medicare doesn't pay. to find out more, call today.
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♪ hard to believe for some of us anyway that it's been 36 years since peter frampton came alive. his concert recording frampton comes alive electrified world in 1976 becoming the top selling album in the world. >> frampton embarked on a just completed tour. on tuesday the highlights of that tour gown sale titled fca 35 an evening with peter frampton. we're deliked to welcome peter frampton to cbs "this morning saturday." great to have you with us. >> thank you. >> welcome peter. how does it feel to sing all
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those songs again when you went on tour? >> well the idea to start with i thought i'm not sure if i want to do this. then we started rehearsing and i hadn't done that since, you know, '76. and the complete thing. so when we started rehearsing it we got all excited about it. then the first night in new jersey, the audience reaction got excited too. >> feels good. >> yeah. >> how much do you change it up? >> well it's like like i say, eric clampton one of his albums was aptly named one night. friday is different from saturday shows, different from sunday show. they are the same songs. maybe you change the order up maybe you add one, take one away. but for me i cannot play the same thing musically twice. there's sign posts. the song has to go a certain
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way. i have to sing a certain way. i like to change it up as much as possible. >> you brought us a special guest with you here. this is your beloved gibson -- >> that i thought didn't exist for 30 years. >> this guitar essentially went up in smoke back in 1980 correct? >> that's correct. we were in south america and there was a cargo plane that all the gear was on crashed on takeoff -- >> and the crew died? >> unfortunately. >> everything looked like it was destroyed, right? >> yes. >> but unbeknownst me the tail broke off as i guess it does a lot of the times, and the guard that was put to guard the debris site thought that the guitars would be a lot safer at home. >> i bet he did. >> then a couple of his friends said how about if you lend to it me and i'll give you some money for it. >> this guitar disappeared essentially 30 odd years. >> yes. two years ago is when i first
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saw the e-mail with my website contact me and i open them all when people write me stuff good or bad, and i scrolled down and i'm scrolling down pictures and pictures of this now. >> your guitar. >> we call it guitar with the singe on top. >> what was it like to pick it up again? >> it's almost like i can't put it into words, you know. because it's -- >> he's going to play it again for us. >> put it into music. don't go away peter frampton will be right back to play two songs for you. you're watching cbs "this morning saturday." [ timers ringing ] [ male announcer ] it's that time of year. time for campbell's green bean casserole. you'll find the recipe at campbellskitchen.com.
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♪ ♪ campbell's. it's amazing what soup can do. ♪ ♪ [ female announcer ] with depression simple pleasures can simply hurt. the sadness, anxiety the loss of interest. the aches and pains and fatigue. depression hurts. cymbalta can help with many symptoms of depression. tell your doctor right away if your depression worsens, you have unusual changes in behavior or thoughts of suicide. antidepressants can increase these in children, teens, and young adults. cymbalta is not approved for children under 18. people taking maois or thioridazine or with uncontrolled glaucoma should not take cymbalta. taking it with nsaid pain relievers, aspirin, or blood thinners may increase bleeding risk. severe liver problems some fatal, were reported. signs include abdominal pain and yellowing skin or eyes. tell your doctor about all your medicines including those for migraine and while on cymbalta, call right away if you have high fever confusion and stiff muscles or serious allergic skin reactions like blisters, peeling rash, hives,
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frampton with his classic. >> here's "lines on my face." ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ lines on my face ♪ ♪ not one thing she said ♪ ♪ she spoke of strangers ♪
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♪ kept on trying buying time ♪ ♪ my young thing ♪ ♪ somehow i got the feeling ♪ ♪ i opened my eyes too late ♪ ♪ i called out your name ♪ ♪ there's no answer ♪ ♪ we lived on your door step ♪ ♪ made you my wife ♪ ♪ i don't need that ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ i called out your name ♪ ♪ there's no answer ♪ ♪ when we met on your door step i made you my wife ♪ ♪ i don't need that ♪ ♪
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>> stay with us. peter frampton will be back with us with another classic," baby i love your way." you're watching cbs "this morning saturday." am i going too fast? you're doing great, honey. why is that guy honking at me? introducing huggies mommy answers. the best advice in one place. from the brand new moms trust. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] it's time for medicare open enrollment. are you ready? time to compare plans and see what's new. you don't have to make changes but it's good to look. maybe you can find better coverage, save money, or both. and check out the preventive benefits you get after the health care law. ♪ ♪ medicare open enrollment. now's
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the time. visit medicare.gov or call 1-800-medicare. ♪ ♪ [ knock on door ] cool. you found it. wow. nice place. yeah. [ chuckles ] the family thinks i'm out shipping these. smooth move. you used priority mail flat rate boxes. if it fits, it ships for a low, flat rate. paid for postage online and arranged a free pickup. and i'm gonna track them online, too. nice. between those boxes and this place, i'm totally staying sane this year.
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do i smell snickerdoodles? maybe. [ timer dings ] got to go. priority mail flat rate boxes. online pricing starts at $5.15. only from the postal service.
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now here's gayle king with a look at what's happening monday on cbs "this morning." >> good morning the holiday travel season is coming up on monday peter greenberg will show us the five most delayed fingts the u.s. the ones you don't want to take. we'll show you monday at 7:00 on cbs "this morning." and then next week on cbs "this morning saturday" the singer-songwriter suzanne vega performs live right here in studio 57. >> now here again is peter frampton performing "baby i love your way." have a great weekend, everyone. ♪ ♪ shadows grow so long before my eyes ♪
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♪ and they're moving across the page ♪ ♪ suddenly the day turns into night ♪ ♪ far away from the city ♪ ♪ don't hesitate ♪ ♪ 'cause your love won't wait ♪ ♪ oh, baby i love your way every day ♪ ♪ wanna tell you i love your way every day ♪ ♪ wanna be with unite and day ♪
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♪ ♪ moon appears to shine and light the sky ♪ ♪ with the help of some firefly ♪ ♪ wonder how they have the power to shine shine shine ♪ ♪ i can see them under the pine ♪ ♪ don't hesitate ♪ ♪ 'cause your love won't wait ♪ ♪ oh, baby i love your way every day ♪ ♪ wanna tell you i love your way
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oh ♪ ♪ wanna be with unite and day oh yeah ♪ ♪ oh, baby i love your way every day ♪ ♪ wanna tell you i love your way ♪ ♪ wanna welcome back you night and day ♪ ♪ yeah yeah yeah ♪ ♪ [ applause ] >> thank you. ♪ baby i love your way every day ♪ ♪
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